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August 02, 1939 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1939-08-02

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

society features
Honor Program
And Reception

34 Injured In Rioting At Fisher Body Plant In Cleveland

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

Pi Lambda Theta To Hold
Event In Honor Of New
And Leading Members
Pi Lamda Theta, women's honorary
education society, will hold an Honors
Day program and a reception at 8
p.m. today in the Rackham Building.
The program, which is an innova-
tion on the Michigan Campus, is an
attempt on the part of the organiza-
tion to recognize the unusual honors
of its Ngembers. The honors will be
cited by Mrs. Bertha Ashby Hess, and
newly initiated members will at this
time be presented with their key and
membership certificate.
Those serving on committees are
Frances Quigley, toastmistress; Mar-.
garet Behringer, decorations; Grace
Mass, reservations chairman, and
Phyllis Huston, Virginia Johnston,
Eva Keller, Lela Lockett, Mary
Michael, Clara Berdan, Clara Mae
Beach, Janet DeBorst and Margaret
MacDougall.
Dance Honors
Student Group
Stevens Will Play Songs
From Eastern States
Students from eastern states will
be specially honored at the weekly
dance Friday night in the Union ball-
room.
Dancing will be held from 9 p.m.
to .1 a.m. to the melodies of Earl Stev-
ens and his 10-piece orchestra. Songs
of the eastern states and eastern
schools and colleges will be featured
and students may make their re-
quests at the dance.
Students from the following states
are irged to attend the dance: New
York, Massachusetts, Connecticut,
Maine, New Hampshire, New Jersey,
Vermont, Pennsylvania and Rhode
Island.
Students may come in couples or
stag. Tickets can be purchased at
the door.
In charge of the dance are Virginia
Osgood, Betty Kepler and Harriet
Thom, all members of the League
Council which sponsors the weekly
social evenings.
(gets Regional
View Of Fair
(Continued rrom Page 1)
waterproof watches?" (Miss Connell
welcomes aid in solving this problem).
At the Fair, the Michigan delegate
highly recommended the Master-
pieces of Art display, "Where one can
see more great painting than is pos-
sible in a lifetime of, travel." Miss
Connell also put the Trylon doorman
the House of Jewels and the Foreign
Zone .on,\everyone 's "must" list.
Strangely enough, all she recom-
mended in the amusement Area was
the endless chanting of the barkers.
Miss Connell told how this gram-
matical slip of one hawker has be-
come the standard gag of the Fair:
"You have never saw a Hopi clif-
dweller in all your life."
On her days off Miss Michigan ex-
plores New York city rapidly, "push-
ing her way through the subways
with the rest of them, and loving
it." She told how she was so im-
pressed by the hurry that it seems to
characterize New Yorkers, and how
even "the water seems to run out of
the faucets faster."
When asked about visitors from
Michigan, her face actually lit up,
since as she explained, there have

been so many. "Perhaps," she laughed,
because their Ann Arbor walking
training has prepared them so welL."
She asked this correspondent to re-
mind people in Michigan to stop by
and say hello, for as she put it, "see-
ing someone from near home makes a
day much brighter.
So despite the fact that Marcia
Connell seemed to have been won
over by the Big Town-we can be
sure that her hearts still belongs to
Michigan.
As a parting remark, she advised
prospective Fair visitors to equip
themselves with a comfortable pair
of shoes and make some sort of plan-+
ned program for their Fair explora-1
tions.

A fire hose and tear gas bombs were used to quell a riot of United Auto Workers-CIO pickets and sympa-
thizers at the gates of the strikebound Fisher Body Plant of General Motors at Cleveland. Police estimated
the crowd of pickets at 5,000 to 6,000. Thirty-four persons were injured, none seriously. A general view of the
scene is shown here, with tear gas driving back the crowd.

Struggling, Unmanageable Locks
Do Not Stump Experts On Fashion
- By MARTY GRAHAM between stage, try waving it loosely
Now that August has finally ar- with rag curlers and you'll be able
rived and you're looking forward to to wear the popular little girl dresses
a few weeks vacation from trudging perfectly.
up and down the steps at Angell If your hair has become dull and
Hall and sleeping through eight brittle from swimming and being in
o'clocks, its time to begin thinking the sun too much, the time-honored
about what to do with your ,hair. method of making it soft and shiney
.ts. i. pa.n still holds sway. If you brush it re-
By this time it is probably in a ligiously at least once a day and
totally unmanageable condition eith- have-an olive oil shampoo every 10
er having reached the dangling "I days, you will soon be able to speak
can't do a thing with it" stage, or
else you had it cropped short last of it again as your crowning glory."
June and it's in the unbecoming in-
between stage. Mar orie H11iis
SWhether or not to get a permanenrt
in the middle of the summer is one 5 . 1 1
of the most provoking questions in Tales H usband
the line of coiffures. But it's usually
the best plan to wait until a couple,
of weeks before school opens in the 'Live Alone And Like It'
fall, as then you can start off the Advice Refuted
new year on the right foot by feel- -____eue
ing like a glamour girl the minute
you hit the Campus. VALLEY FORGE, Pa., Aug. 1.--4
Also, you really needn't lose sleep -Dark-haired Marjorie Hillis, who
over the appearance of your hair liked living alone so much she wrote
right now, because you can look smart a book about it, got married today.
even though it is too long or too Not only that, but she:
short and practically void of any 1. Enthusiastically pro c laim e d
curl. "there's nothing to beat old-fashioned
One of the most youthful hair love."
styles that will fill the bill if your 2. Announced she'd "like to raise
hair is long, is to cut your front locks a family."
so ha: teyreabout six inches long The '49-year-old New Yorker,
so that: they're l' them in he longefamed as author of "Live Alone and
and then twirl them into a large looske I."Cptltdt mncina
curl on top of your head. Then, if Like It." Capitulated to romance in a
you tie the rest of yourhair at the marriage to Thomas Henry Roulston,
nape of your neck with a bow, you'll.65, Brooklyn chain store operator,
look as though you've stepped out of while his 30-year-old son acted as
a daguerreotype. best man and his two grandchildren
Or, if your hair is in the short in- watched the ceremony in the home of
14.1 - L ..:a f,. .:.4.:.. «'

V1eddings
.NFand .,-
Engagements
Mrs. Frank G. Kane of Birming-
ham has announced the engagement
of her daughter, Julie, to Frederick
S. Hunter, jr., of Dallas, Tex. The
wedding is to take place in early Sep-
tember.
Miss Kane, a member of Collegiate
Sorosis and Mortar Board, is a gradu-
ate of the University. Mr. Hunter
was graduated from Miami Universi-
ty at Oxford, 0. He is a member of
Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity.
Lincoln-Brandt Nuptial
The marriage of Helen Brandt,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles H.
Brandt of Ludington, to George A.
Lincoln of Flint took place Friday
afternoon at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Brandt.
Mrs. Lincoln graduate from the
University in 1936 and is affiliated
with Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Mr.
Lincoln graduated from Michigan
State College in 1936 and is a member
of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.
Educaion Lectures
For Week Listed
Three lectures on various phases
of education will be given during the
coming week on the regular series
sponsored by the School of Educa-
tion.
Mr. Irving H. Anderson of
Harvard University will speak to-
day: on "The Improvement of
Adult Reading." Th mrsday, Miss
Edith Bader, Assistant Superinten-
dent of Schools in Ann Arbor, will
talk on "What Is Happening in Ele-
mentary Education?"
These lectures will be given at 4:05
p.m. each day in the Auditorium of
the University High School. All in-
terested are invited to attend.
Lecture On Chinese Rugs,
Mrs. H. B. Merrick will give a lec-
ture on the symbolism of Chinese
rugs at 10 a.m. tomorrow at 928
Church Street. Mrs. 'Merrick also
has a display of Chinese rugs at the
workshop at Tappan School. Both
the lecture and the display are open
to the public.

(Continued from Page 2) r
Building today at 8 o'clock. Mrs.-
Bertha Ashby Hess will be the Hon-
ors Day speaker. Call Grace Maas
(4697) for reservations.
Organ Recital. Edward Broadhead,
organist, of Durham, North Carolina,
will give a recital in partial fulfill-I
ment of the requirements for the
Master of Music degree, this eve-
ning, Aug. 2, at 8:15 o'clock, in
Hill Auditorium. The general public
is invited to attend.
Opening Tonight, "Judgment Day,"
the exciting melodrama by Elmer
Rice, presented by the Michigan Rep-
ertory Players. Tickets still avail-
able for every evening this week.
Curtain at 8:30, Lydia Mendelssohn
Theatre.
Lecture Recital. Ernst Krenek,
guest professor of composition, will'
give a lecture recital of his own com-
positions in the Assembly room of
the Rackham Building, Thursday af-
ternoon, Aug. 3, at 4:15 o'clock. There
will be no admission charge. Mr..
Krenek will be assisted by Nellie
Hahnel, mezzo-soprano; Helen Titus,
pianist; and a string quartet com-
posed of Adelbert Purga and Frances
Ayres, violinists; Romine Hamilton,
violist, and Hanns Pick, violoncellist.
Deutscher Verein: The last picnic
of the season will take place on
Thursday, Aug. 3. Meet at Deutsches
Haus at 5:30 p.m. Transportation
furnished to Portage Lake. Admis-
sion 50 cents to all non-members.
Open to all students and faculty
members interested. Picnic supper,
games, songs and swimming.
Otto G. Graf.
Piano Recital. John McAlister, pi-
anist, of Lexington, Ky., will give a
recital in partial fulfillment of the
requirements for the Bachelor of Mu-
sic degree, Thursday evening, Aug. 3,
at 8:15 o'clock, in the School of Mu-
sic Auditorium. The general public
is invited to attend.
Student Loans: The Committee on
Student Loans will meet Friday, Aug.
4, in Room 2, University Hall to pass
on loans for the coming school year.
Appointments to meet the Commit-
tee should be made at once in the
Office of the Dean of Students.
The Textbook Exhibition of the
American Institute of Graphic Arts
is on display in the library, Room
1502, University Elementary School
all this week up to Friday,
August 4. Sixty textbooks for ele-
mentary and high schools, and col-
lege have been chosen to illustrate ex-
cellence in design and workmanship
of typography, illustration, and bind-
ing and their fitness to present ideas
successfully. The books may be ex-
amined from 7:45 a.m. to 5:00 p.ni.
from Monday through Friday and
from 8-12 Saturday morning.
Candidates for the Master's Degree
in History: Students taking the lan-
guage examination on Friday, Aug. 4,
should bring their own dictionaries.
Copies of old examinations are on
file in the Basement Study Hall of
the General Library.
The Fellowship Committee of the
Ann ,Arbor-Ypsilanti Branch of the
American Association of University
Women will accept applications for a
five hundred dollar ($500) gift fel-
lowship for a woman for graduate
study at the University of Michigan
for 1939-1940. Application blanks
are to be obtained at the Graduate
School offices and are to be returned
there, complete with two letters of
Your films deserve the Best
of care - Bring them to
GACH'S CAMERA SHOP
Nickels Arcade

I, 'II

recommendation from professors with
whom the student has taken work,
by Friday, Aug. 4.
Piano Recital. Robert Shanklin, of
Wichita, Kansas, will give a piano
recital in partial fulfillment of the
requirements of the Master of Music
degree, Friday evening, Aug. 4, at
8:15 o'clock, in the School of Music
Auditorium. Mr. Shanklin is a stu-
dent of Professor Mabel Ross Rhead.
The public is invited to attend with-
out admission charge.
Candidates for the Teacher's Cer-
tificate to be recommended by the
Faculty of the School of Education
at the close of the Summer Session:
The Comprehensive Examination in
Education will be given on Saturday,
Aug. 5, at 9 o'clock in 1430'U.E.S.
Printed information regarding the
examination may be secured at the
School of Education office.
New York State Teachers' Exam-
ination. The examination for the New
York State Teachers' license will be
held on Aug. 5 at 9:15 a.m. in Room
108 in Romance Languages Building.,
"Psychology Master's Comprehen-
sive Examination" will be given Sat-
urday, Aug. 12, at 2 p.m. in Room
3126 Natural Science Building.
Badminton: The badminton courts
in Barbour Gymnasium will be closed
in the evenings for the remainder of
the Summer Session.
Colleges of Literature, Science, and
'the Arts, and Architecture; Schools
of Education, Forestry and Music:
Each student who has changed his
address since June registration

should file a change of address in
Room 4 U.H., so that the report of
his summer work will not be mis-
directed.
Colleges of Literature, Science, and
the Arts, and Architecture; Schools
of Education, Forestry and Musie:
Summer Session students wishing .a
transcript of this summer's work only
should file a request in Room 4, U.H.,
several days before leaving Ann Ar-
bor. Failure to file this request will
result in a needless delay of several
days.
The University Bureau of Appoint-
ments and Occupational Information
has received notice of the following
Civil Service examinations. Last date
for filing application is noted in each
case:
Detroit :
Florist, salary: "prevailing rate~
Aug. 8.
Airport Radio Operator, salary:
$1,800, Aug. 9.
Michigan Unemployment Compen-
sation Commission.
Unemployment Claims Examiner,
salary range: $150-310, Aug. 16.
Complete announcements on file at
the University Bureau of Appoint-
ments and Occupational Information
201 Mason Hall. Office hours: 9-12
and 2-4.
University Bureau of Appoint-
ments and Occupational Infor.
mation.
Geographic List Offered
Students interested in meeting oth-
er students enrolled here from their
section of the country may obtain a
listing of students arranged in geo-
graphic order by calling at Room 122
of the Rackham Building.

Edward Broadhead
To Present Recital
Edward Hall Broadhead, organist,
of Durham, North Carolina, will give
a recital in partial fulfillment of the
requirements for the Master of Mu-
sic degree at 8:15 p.m. today in Hill
Auditorium. Mr. Broadhead is a
pupil of Palmer Christian of the
School of Music faculty.
The following program will be pre-
sented:
Toccata, Adagio and Fugue in C
major ................. J. S. Bach
Symphony for Organ ........ Weitz
Regina Pacis
MIater Dolorosa
Stella Maris
Scherzo from the Second Symphony
.......... . ...........Vierne
Prelude. .........Samazeuilh
Pageant ..................Sowerby
Phi Delta Kappa Luncheon
F e a t u r e s Introductions
Phi Delta Kappa held its weekly
luncheon at 12:10 p.m. yesterday at
the Michigan Union.
As the first luncheon since the in-
itiation of new members, it was given
over to them by the old members. To
acquaint the old members with the
new ones, each new member was re-
quested to make a short speech, in-
troducing himself and telling some-
thing of his work in education.

the bride's sister here.
Occupational Scene
Discussed In Talk
Questions paramount in the occu-
pational scene were discussed, by
James B. Edmonson, dean of the
School of Education yesterday in a
lecture entitled "Changing Occupa-
tional Scene and Implications for
Secondary Schools."
Speaking before the Graduate
Commercial Club, Dean Edmonson
pointed out some significant facts
and trends affecting occupations for
youths, what some difficulties faced
by the prospective worker are, what
outcome should be stressed in train-l
ing in our secondary schools and what
some of the increasing responsibilities.
of the secondary school are.1

&ac t(CL Yx5ALodLe

i.

' BOO K
TEXTBOOKS,
REFERENCE BOOKS

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MUSKRAT COATS
Ufat ce &ie w
MUSKRAT, that most versatile of furs, destined to be
a favorite in back-to-school wardrobes. With its sturdy
character hidden beneath skins that are carefully
worked, dyed and blended, it is perfect for day-long
and evening wear. The mink-blends and sable-dyes
with let-out pelts, the silvertones, excitingly new-
looking with almost collarless necklines, more natural
shoulders and gracefully flared front and back fullness.

I

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-231 S. State St. at Liberty St. - Phones: 5933, 9242-
DRUGS . .. COSMETICS .. . TOBACCOS
SALE of AUGUST 2ND

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$ 99

$155 and $185

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Because our coat collection was bought when fur
market prices were at the lowest ebb in years, our
SPECIAL AUGUST PRICES represent unmatched
savings in fur coats of superlative value and enduring
beauty.

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CIGARETTES
4t I R Cas

50C
BARBASOL

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Deferred Payments May Be Arranged

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